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Welcome to AirForceOTS.com! The site for OTS Applicants/Selects, by BOT/COT Graduates

We have worked hard the past few years to bring members the most up to date and accurate information about BOT/COT and the OTS application process as possible. Our administrators and moderators take care of the operation of the site and are a wealth of knowledge and experience. The staff members have been specially selected to answer questions in their field or in appropriate stages of the OTS process.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 12, 2013 - Forty years ago today, a C-141A Starlifter transport jet with a distinctive red cross on its tail lifted off from Hanoi, North Vietnam, and the first flight of 40 U.S. prisoners of war began their journey home through Operation Homecoming."

WASHINGTON, Feb. 8, 2013 - A hulking Military Sealift Command-chartered tanker ship is expected to begin offloading millions of gallons of fuel in Antarctica today as part of the Defense Department's Operation Deep Freeze mission, which supplies the National Science Foundation at one of the world's most remote scientific outposts."

RagMOPP writes "New Air Force team’s shadowy role
by defensetech on December 5, 2012
By Bill Sweetman

Popularly known as Area 51, the U.S. Air Force’s secret flight-test base at Groom Lake, Nev., was rebuilt and expanded in the late 1980s. The frequency of the “Janet” Boeing 737 commuter service that connects the base with Las Vegas shows that the facility has continued to operate at a healthy rate since then. Exactly one program known to have been conducted at Groom Lake since 1985, Boeing’s Bird of Prey stealth demonstrator, has been unveiled. Add to that Lockheed Martin’s RQ-170 Sentinel, which most likely was tested there, and Groom Lake has brought forth a couple of mice, as far as the public knows."

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan -- Humanitarian aid missions conjure up images of Airmen air-dropping supplies to austere locations too hazardous to deliver by trucks or convoy. Images of smiling villagers eagerly awaiting much needed vittles and supplies. But not all "HA" missions in Afghanistan require airlift; some require simply putting rubber to road and heading out to the location."